John Stuart Mill's Higher Act

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In his second proof of the assertion that higher acts are more desirable than lower, Mill employs the utility test in assessing the sum, as opposed to the individual, happiness brought about by higher acts. Mill states that “if it may be possibly doubted whether a noble character is always the happier for its nobleness, there can be no doubt that it makes other people happier, and that the world in general is immensely the gainer by it”. By “a noble character” Mill means one who pursues higher acts, and who, Mill asserts, increases sum happiness through this pursuit, regardless of how it affects their own happiness. This defense prompts Mill to then show how specific higher acts can increase happiness, which provides insight into Utilitarian …show more content…

Mill enumerates some of these pains, fingering disease, poor education, and poverty as some of the worst ills producing pain in the human condition. Mill asserts that “Poverty, in any sense implying suffering, may be completely eliminated by the wisdom of society”. Likewise, Mill contends that disease is constantly losing ground to the “progresses of science”. An obvious action that would further the achievement of both these goals would be the pursuit of education and the stimulation of man’s higher faculties to make them more capable of solving the problems facing humanity. Thus in the normative hierarchy of Utilitarianism under John Mill, pursuing education and intellectual stimulation to further one’s mental abilities has value for the pleasure that it brings from the satisfaction of man’s higher order pleasures, discussed above, and value for the what they add towards man’s abilities to conquer pain. A good utilitarian would therefore value a quality education, intellectual stimulation in the form of the arts and sciences, and encourage such enjoyments in others. However, it should be clear that Mill does not disvalue lower order acts, they produce pleasure after all and thus have some value. What Mill stipulates is that they should be enjoyed as supplemental to higher order pleasures, and not enjoyed if …show more content…

Beginning with the literal claim of the contention, it is clear that humans are not “competent judges”, under Mill’s formulation, capable of judging the position of a satisfied pig. Man simply cannot know what it is like to be a pig, satisfied or otherwise, because pigs and other animals exist in a non-conceptual state of consciousness, if consciousness is even the correct word. Humans cannot choose to turn off our conceptual faculties and exist in a state of jumbled sensations that form fleeting percepts, and as such are not qualified to judge the state of a pig or any other lower animal. However, this criticism belies Mill’s broader weakness: his lack of a clear exposition of what is meant by man’s “higher faculties” and how our consciousness differs vastly from that of other animals. Mill’s essential claim in the supposed superiority of higher order acts is that they produce qualitatively superior pleasures that satisfy man’s “higher faculties”. Lacking clear conception of what “higher faculties” means Mill is restricted to defenses of the claim which show what pleasures the majority of men think satisfy the pleasures of their higher faculties. This leads to the preference test which, unsurprisingly, does a great job at showing which things people prefer, but does not show the value of an activity in relation to its

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